Ramos v. Pangilinan
Ramos v. Pangilinan
Ramos v. Pangilinan
Pangilinan
G.R. No. 185920, July 20, 2010
J. Carpio Morales
Petitioners: Juanita Trinidad Ramos, Alma Ramos Worak, Manuel T. Ramos, Josefina R.
Rothman, Sonia R. Post, Elvira P. Munar, and Ofelia R. Lim
Respondents: Danilo Pangilinan, Rodolfo Sumang, Lucrecio Bautista and Rolando Antenor
Case Summary: Respondents won a labor case for money claims against Ramos where the LA
ordered Ramos to pay P1.6M to respondents. The Deputy Sheriff of the NLRC implemented this
by levying the Pandacan property owned by Ramos. Ramos questioned this, claiming that the
Pandacan property was the family home and thus, exempt from execution to satisfy the judgment
award.
The Supreme Court ruled that the Pandacan property was not constituted as a family home. Here,
the Ramos family claims that the family home was constituted prior to August 3, 1988, or as early
as 1944. However, there was no proof that the Pandacan property was judicially or extrajudicially
constituted as the Ramos’ family home.
Doctrine: If the family home was constructed before the effectivity of the Family Code or before
August 3, 1988, the family home must have been constituted either judicially or extra-judicially.
If the family home was constructed after the effectivity of the Family Code on August 3, 1988,
there is no need to constitute extrajudicially or judicially.
FACTS
• In 2005, respondents won a labor case for money claims against Ramos
o The Labor Arbiter ordered Ramos to pay P1.6M to respondents (backwages, etc.)
• The Deputy Sheriff of the NLRC implemented this by levying a property owned by
Ramos
o Located in Pandacan, Manila (Pandacan property)
• Respondents countered:
o The Pandacan property is not the Ramos family home
§ The Ramos family has another in Antipolo
§ In fact, the Pandacan property served as the company's business address
as borne by the company's letterhead.
o Assuming that the Pandacan property was indeed the family home, only the value
equivalent to P300,000 was exempt from execution
• The Ramos family then filed a Manifestation questioning the Notice to Vacate issued by
the Sheriff, alleging that:
o Assuming that the Pandacan property may be levied upon, the family home
straddled 2 lots
o Hence, they cannot be asked to vacate the house
• NLRC affirmed
RULE
• GR: The family home is a real right which is gratuitous, inalienable and free from
attachment, constituted over the dwelling place and the land on which it is situated, which
confers upon a particular family the right to enjoy such properties, which must remain with
the person constituting it and his heirs.
o XPN: Except in certain special cases
• For the family home to be exempt from execution, distinction must be made as to
what law applies based on when it was constituted and what requirements must be
complied with by the judgment debtor or his successors claiming such privilege.
o Hence, two sets of rules are applicable
• If the family home was constructed before the effectivity of the Family Code or
before August 3, 1988, the family home must have been constituted either judicially
or extra-judicially
§ As provided under Arts. 225, 229-231 and 233 of the Civil Code
o Judicial constitution of the family home requires:
§ Filing a verified petition before the courts
§ Registration of the court's order with the Registry of Deeds of the area
where the property is located
o Extrajudicial constitution of the family home requires:
§ Execution of a public instrument
§ Registering the public instrument with the Registry of Property
§ Governed by Arts. 240 to 242 of the Civil Code
o Failure to comply with either one of these two modes of constitution will bar
a judgment debtor from availing of the privilege
• If the family home was constructed after the effectivity of the Family Code on
August 3, 1988, there is no need to constitute extrajudicially or judicially
o The exemption is effective from the time it was constituted and lasts as long
as any of its beneficiaries under Art. 154 actually resides therein.
o Moreover, the family home should belong to the absolute community or conjugal
partnership, or if exclusively by one spouse, its constitution must have been with
consent of the other, and its value must not exceed certain amounts depending
upon the area where it is located.
o Further, the debts incurred for which the exemption does not apply as provided
under Art. 155 for which the family home is made answerable must have been
incurred after August 3, 1988.
• In both cases, it is not sufficient that the person claiming exemption merely alleges
that such property is a family home.
o This claim for exemption must be set up and proved.
APPLICATION
• In this case, the Ramos family claims that the family home was constituted prior to August
3, 1988, or as early as 1944
o Thus, they must comply with the procedure mandated by the Civil Code
• However, there was no proof that the Pandacan property was judicially or
extrajudicially constituted as the Ramos’ family home
• The sheriff also exhausted all means to execute the judgment but failed because Ramos’
bank accounts were already closed while the other properties in his or the company's
name had already been transferred
o The only property left was the Pandacan property
RULING
Petition DENIED.